Big Big Big 2
Big Big Big 2 Summary
Big Big Big 2 is a ad-supported, with in-app purchases Android app in Card by 2-Person Studio. Released in May 2011 (14 years ago). It has about 3.8M+ installs and 39.4K ratings with a 4.17★ (good) average. Based on AppGoblin estimates, it reaches roughly 2.3K monthly active users and generates around $<10K monthly revenue (49% IAP / 51% ads). Store metadata: updated Sep 24, 2024.
Recent activity: 355 installs this week (1.4K over 4 weeks) showing steady growth , and -41 new ratings this week View trends →
Data tracking: SDKs and third-party integrations were last analyzed on Feb 24, 2025.
Store info: Last updated on Google Play on Sep 24, 2024 .
4.17★
Ratings: 39.4K
Screenshots
App Description
A Big 2, Pusoy Dos, Capsa or Chinese Poker card game. Play online or offline.
Big 2 is an implementation of the popular card game Big 2 or Big Two (Choh Dai Di, Da Lao Er, Chinese Poker, Cap Sa, and many other names). Big 2 is very popular throughout China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore and Taiwan. The game is played by 4 players. The objective of the game is to be the first to get rid of all of your cards. The first player to get rid of all his/her cards wins.
Big Two Rules (Hong Kong and Taiwan)
Card rank (highest to lowest):
2>A>K>Q>J>10>9>8>7>6>5>4>3
Suit rank (highest to lowest): (Hong Kong) ♠>♥>♣>♦ or (Taiwan) ♠>♥>♦>♣
At the beginning of each game, 13 cards are distributed to each player in a counter-clockwise. The player with the 3♦ (Hong Kong Variant) or 3♣ (Taiwan Variant) starts by either playing it singly or as part of a combination, leading to the first trick. Play proceeds counter-clockwise, with normal climbing-game rules applying: each player must play a higher card or combination than the one before, with the same number of cards. Players may also pass, thus declaring that he does not want to play. A pass does not hinder any further play in the game. When all but one of the players have passed in succession the trick is over and a new trick is started by the last player to play.
The game ends when one player runs out of cards.
Hong Kong Variant:
A 5 card group can be beaten by a 5 card group of a stronger type - flush beats any straight, full house beats any straight or flush, four of a kind plus an odd card beats any straight, flush or full house and any straight flush beats all of the other type of five card group.
Taiwan Variant:
The players are not allowed to play a different type of 5-card combination over the current. i.e. a Full House can not be played over a Straight. An honour hand (four of a kind plus a card or a straight flush) can be played not only to beat a lower 5-card hand, but also to beat singles, pairs or triples.
Cards may be played as singles or in groups of two, three, or five, in combinations which resemble poker hands. The leading card to a trick sets down the number of cards to be played; all the cards of a trick must contain the same number of cards. The combinations and their rankings are as follows:
- Single cards: Any card from the deck, ordered by rank with suit being the tie-breaker.
- Pairs: Any two cards of matching rank, ordered as with si
